CHIANG MAI Uncovered Derek Workman a Work in Progress

CHIANG MAI Uncovered Derek Workman a Work in Progress

CHIANG MAI uncovered Derek Workman A Work In Progress 2 3 I have two modes of transport in Chiang Mai; a good pair of shoes and a bike. Both travel at a speed that suits my leisurely pace and are perfectly designed to spot people and places I wouldn’t see if I was skittering by on or in motorised transport, so I set out to try the more usual ways of crossing the city, just so long as it isn’t on a motorbike, that death- trap on two wheels. The songthaew is the workhorse of local transport, and even though the fleet is reasonably modern, the first one I flag down probably came out the same year as the driver, an ancient wearing a week’s stubble and shirt that’s seen better days. He stares vacantly into the distance when I say ‘University,’ mulling over what I could possibly mean. It’s about the biggest building on a straight road in the direction he’s facing, so I’m pretty sure he can’t miss it. I’m heading for the Saturday second-hand market near Payap University but as my Thai doesn’t extend to ‘second-hand market’ and I assumed ‘university’ was reasonably universal, I’d plumped for that. The only other passenger is a young girl with an oversized rucksack, deeply engrossed in texting on her iphone. I go to press the buzzer 4 5 in the ceiling to signal the driver to stop that I assume also runs the TV installed for passenger entertainment and my finger goes straight into a hole. (although I can’t guarantee that because it isn’t switched on). I interrupt my travelling companion’s Whirling at a blurring rate, whatever cooling they provide is blown texting to ask her to press the buzzer away by the hot air streaming in from the open sides. This time I’m above her head, which she does without glad to have a vehicle of character, and look down my nose at the taking her eyes off the screen. pristine new models without badges, Buddhas and spinning computer A brief scout around the market – fans that we skitter by. worth an extended visit – and I flag down a tuk-tuk to take me to We buzz and splutter into the tuk-tuk rank beside Warorot Market. Warorot Market. The tuk-tuk is noisy, windy, rattling and rolling, and There are two official bus stations, but Warorat Market is the transport takes its name from the noise of the engine that chugs it along. hub of most other forms of transport. Songthaews stand in a colourful A tuk-tuk is of no use for taking a tourist ride because it is so low- line, each colour identifying its destination; yellow goes south to Hang slung and the canopy keeping the weather off your head at such a Dong, blue to Lamphun, dark green to Mae Hong, and red circulates so low pitch that all you see is the side of the road and pedestrians anywhere in the city. legs as you wiz along. They may look as if they are built for two but the The heat of the day is building and while the songthaew and driver will keep loading adults, kids and shopping bags until bums are bicycle rickshaw drivers wait for clients they stretch out as best they sticking out the side. There’s probably some sort of legal limit, but in a can on the passenger seat of their respective vehicles. country where a two-seater motor scooter is the transport for a family I’ve set my mind on lunch at Peppermint, a delightful restaurant of five, who’s going to complain? with chatty staff inside the narrow streets of the moat, so I ask my Uncomfortable, rackety and fumey they may be but, like riding a rickshaw driver to take me to Thapae Gate, the nearest entrance camel, an animal designed by a committee who set out to design a to the moat and lunch. For a fare of fifty baht I don’t even argue, horse but got into some pretty powerful weed before the pencil and but climb up and lounge back in the plastic-covered seat with ‘Old paper came out, you have to try it once – but only once. Glory’, the spread-winged design of the American eagle, printed on You’ll pay at least twice the price the backrest. you would for a ride in a songthaew With hand-signals and mild remonstrations to more hasty vehicles, so be prepared to barter, but he’s we work our way through the tight streets surrounding the market, still yours for the duration of the ride full of shoppers and market traffic, onto Thapae Road. Cars, pick-ups, and will take you directly to where songthaews, tuk-tuks, motorbikes and even bicycles overtake us as you want to go, as distinct from a we gently perambulate along the busy street. My driver, and now songthaew that will wander at will personal guide, points out the few remaining wooden buildings with and paying passengers, eventually their ornate fretwork decoration and pillared balconies, jewels set arriving at where you want to go amid the sad excretions of more mundane modernity. but with no timescale in mind. We arrive at Tha Pae Gate and I’m going to get out on the road on I’ve got an aged boy racer the opposite side of the paved area so my driver can look for another with a ponytail and a weird style punter, but no, Tha Pae Gate is Thapae Gate, right to the arch of in vehicular decor. To help the its entrance. My driver jumps off, flags down the traffic, and in front ventilation and cooling system of four-wheel-drives, revving motorbikes and honking songthaews, open-sided vehicles naturally have, casually pushes his rickshaw across the rowdy road with me still in there are two four-inch computer it, and up the ramp onto the paved area to set me safely at my fans wired to the car battery destination. Service with a Thai smile. 6 7 From well before dawn until late at night Muang Mai market buzzes, with a brief respite during the heat of the afternoon. sit on a weathered bench overlooking the Ping River. In front of me a traditional-style wooden building of modern construction is protect- I ed from closer inspection by a high hedge of deep purple bougain- villea, its glowing blossom reflected in the murky brown of the river. The property to the left, a grand house of porticoes, pillars and shaded balconies, has an even higher hedge, its top manicured into crenella- tions, behind which carefully trimmed cypress trees stand, tapering to the top like a row of green carrots stood on their fat ends. This bucolic riverside scene is in total contrast to the raucousness of Muang Mai, the wholesale vegetable market behind me, for which the phrase hustle-and-bustle could have been invented and which makes every other market seem as sedate as a Sunday stroll in the park. From well before dawn until late at night the market buzzes, with a brief respite during the heat of the afternoon. When I arrived in the early hours I saw a day labourer curled up in a floral duvet in the large hooped two-wheel trolley he’ll use for work, undisturbed by the changing coloured lights of Narawat Bridge as they cycle through red, yellow, blue and green behind him. He’ll spend his day trollying 8 9 produce from trucks to small pickups and motorcycles. On the footpaths along the river on either side of the road small traders, mainly women, sit under parasols and garden marquees wrapped in thick coats and scarves, chatting and laughing with the other ladies going about their business in a way that men never seem to, taking companionship in the cold and dark and the tedium of long hours waiting for buyers for their five kilo bags of tomatoes for 50 baht, small eggplant at 40 baht a bag, fish packed in twos and threes, film-wrapped over polystyrene trays, tiny garlic the size of a fingernail, bundles of lemongrass, snow peas at 60 baht a kilo. Cabbages and onward journey to smaller markets in out-lying villages. Mopeds with onions, cucumber and kohlrabi line the roadside, packed in clear sidecars shuttle larger orders than the porters can carry in their trollies. plastic bags; red, green and yellow bell pepper laid in mounds along- Creamy white cauliflower, limes of all sizes, purple shallots, pumpkins side each other, winter vegetables brought from the north to serve the by the hundred, chopped open to show their deep orange flesh, a restaurants and tables of Chiang Mai. rainbow of peppers, tomatoes and chilies, lemongrass and galangal, In the main market movement is constant. Porters wait by the en- holy basil and ginger. Bundles of morning glory wrapped in newspaper trance with their looped iron panniers, hovering hopefully as pick-ups (ubiquitous in Thai cooking, banned in the US) are hand-balled from loaded to the gunels with fruit and veg arrive. Large green umbrel- the back of a pick-up and stacked beside a stall. As they are being las shading the small external stalls that ring the market are raised off-loaded on one side the stall-holder is selling them in bundles of five and lowered so the high-barred sides of the pick-ups don’t knock and six on the other.

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